i give him props for this ! the jews controls the media and music, hollywood they protait black people in movies as pimps,drugs dealers, violent animals, rapist, junkies. i just watched taxi driver yesterday that movie is racist as fuck

Funny thing about that movie is that although yeah Travis Bickle could be perceived as racist, the majority of scum he deals with (Harvey Keitel as the pimp Sport, Senator Pallantine, creepy ass Scorcese talking about shooting a woman in the vagina) are all White lol!!!

Yah man.
Not really sure about the racism. Again, on,y seen it once, a while back, but it am normally pretty sensitive to those things. Granted the industry as a whole was pretty racist up into the early 80s.

Funny thing about that movie is that although yeah Travis Bickle could be perceived as racist, the majority of scum he deals with (Harvey Keitel as the pimp Sport, Senator Pallantine, creepy ass Scorcese talking about shooting a woman in the vagina) are all White lol!!!

lol he called black people spooks ! the criminals are all black ! and you dont even have black actors in the movie but all the black people in the movie you see are bad

idk, i grew up hearing a lot of racist, sexist, and other -ist humor...and it never really affected me to the point of changing my ideals or turning me into a bigot. i think people are overly hyper-sensitive in today's world, so when we look back several decades there's absolutely no context to view anything in.

i'm not a big fan of this new brand of self-conscious, "nice" comedy where nobody's a punchline and everybody's a winner (oh, except the stereotypical southern hick and the drunk irishman and old people, they're still all okay to make fun of)...to me, i think it all should be fair game-- if something is funny, then people should just say it instead of analyzing the controversy it might cause.

that's why i dig Neal, he's one of the few that still speak their mind and understand the difference between a joke and a hate speech. i personally don't mind when people make fun of my ethnicities and racial heritages (i'm kind of a mutt), so it really makes me roll my eyes when people crusade against comics just for trying to go for a joke.

....however, with that said, it is virtually impossible to defend that Flinstones clip above lol. i mean, there probably is a line somewhere-- i'm not sure where it begins or ends, but that episode did a loopdy-loop and a flippity hop right over it when they wrote that scene in.

I think Bro King has drawn a bad example with Taxi Driver. Granted, there was some pretty heavy racism, again I'll say, in all american film and television up until the 80s. That's when it started to lapse.

I actually watched Eddie Murphy Raw, over the weekend. The bit he OPENS WITH, is about how, he doesn't want "faggots" looking at his ass. There is no way he could get away with that today, 30 years later.

I think Bro King has drawn a bad example with Taxi Driver. Granted, there was some pretty heavy racism, again I'll say, in all american film and television up until the 80s. That's when it started to lapse.

I actually watched Eddie Murphy Raw, over the weekend. The bit he OPENS WITH, is about how, he doesn't want "faggots" looking at his ass. There is no way he could get away with that today, 30 years later.

yeah, and Richard Pryor named his Grammy-winning 1977 comedy album Bicentennial Nigger...which i doubt would fly by today's standards. it's sad that we've become (figurative) slaves to our own invented ways of communication, and that we see words as having more power than the ideas behind them--especially in the case of Pryor's album, where the title is supposed to be a brutally honest critique of how black culture was being represented during the past several centuries; yet, ironically, most people today wouldn't even dare saying the full name of his album and instead refer to it with some euphemism that softens the impact that the title was meant to have in the first place...which is a major discredit to what Pryor was trying to do. i get that some words are just better left unsaid, especially ones with such an ugly history as ^ that one above, but people have got to remember that the concepts of prejudice and hatred have long predated any words that describe them. it's not like policing the word itself will get rid of any of those feelings some racist dick might have, so to me it seems pointless to try and ban all of these offensive words from the public lexicon...it's not doing anything to help; all of those efforts could be utilized much more in things like keeping the internet neutral and standing up against corporate lobbyists in Washington...who gives a flying fuck if some fat cook said the n-word once back in the '80s? (Paula Deen)

idk, that's my two cents on the matter...as i'm sure you're all well aware of by now, haha.

...It's sad that we've become (figurative) slaves to our own invented ways of communication, and that we see words as having more power than the ideas behind them...

Well said, I couldn't have said it better myself. At the moment, people are "battling" and preaching against words as opposed to ideas, we live in the time of "The Cult Followers"; where people are willing to be sweet talked, then willing to accept actions that completely contradict the script completely.